Santa Cruz Catholic church, located at southwest corner of 22nd Street and 6th Avenue in Tucson, Arizona; seen from t...

Tucson

Tucson offers Catholic pilgrims spiritual encounters at historic Mission San Xavier del Bac and the Byzantine Mary Undoer of Knots Shrine.

United States 🌍 North America
🌍 Country
United States
⛪ Diocese
Diocese of Tucson
🗺️ Coordinates
32.1072, -111.0080

The Spanish called it the "White Dove of the Desert." Rising from the Sonoran Desert floor south of Tucson, Mission San Xavier del Bac is one of the finest examples of Spanish Colonial architecture in the United States—a baroque jewel of white stucco, carved stone, and polychrome saints that seems almost to shimmer in the Arizona heat. Founded in 1692 by the legendary Jesuit missionary Father Eusebio Kino, the present church was completed in 1797 and has served the Tohono O'odham people continuously for over two centuries.

Father Kino was one of the great figures of the American frontier. This Italian-born Jesuit mapped the Gulf of California, proved that Baja California was a peninsula rather than an island, founded 25 missions across what is now Arizona and Mexico, and baptized thousands of native peoples. He visited the Tohono O'odham village of Bac in 1692 and established a mission that would flourish for three centuries.

The church that pilgrims see today was built by Franciscans who took over after the Jesuit expulsion from Spanish territories in 1767. Its ornate interior—with gilded retablos, painted ceilings, and life-size statues of saints—represents the most complete example of Spanish Colonial sacred art in the United States. The mission remains an active parish serving the San Xavier District of the Tohono O'odham Nation, a living link between ancient faith and contemporary Native American Catholicism.

📜 History & Spiritual Significance

Father Eusebio Francisco Kino, S.J., was born in 1645 in the Italian Tyrol, educated in Austria, and spent the last twenty-four years of his life as a missionary in the Pimería Alta—the vast frontier stretching across present-day Arizona and Sonora. A skilled cartographer, astronomer, and diplomat, Kino established a chain of missions while riding 50 miles a day on horseback to visit his far-flung congregations.

Kino first visited Bac (a Tohono O'odham word meaning "where the water emerges") in 1692. The mission he founded endured through the Jesuit period, though the original structures were small and temporary. When the Jesuits were expelled from Spanish territories in 1767, Franciscan friars took over the mission chain.

The present church was begun under Franciscan supervision around 1783 and completed in 1797. The architect is unknown, but the influence of Spanish and Mexican baroque is evident in every detail. The ornate retablos (altar screens), the painted ceiling, and the carved statues represent the labor of indigenous craftsmen working under Spanish direction—a fusion of cultures that gives the mission its distinctive character.

After Mexican independence and the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the mission fell under American jurisdiction. It has remained an active parish throughout, never abandoned or secularized. Today, the Tohono O'odham people maintain their ancestral connection to the mission while welcoming pilgrims from around the world.

☩ Pilgrimage Sites in Tucson

Mission San Xavier del Bac

The "White Dove of the Desert" — finest Spanish Colonial architecture in the U.S.

The mission church is a masterpiece of Spanish Colonial Baroque architecture. The elaborate interior features gilded retablos, painted ceilings, and carved statues of saints. The recumbent statue of St. Francis Xavier, to which pilgrims attach milagros (small metal offerings), is a focal point of popular devotion. The mission museum documents the history of the church and its people.

Address 1950 W San Xavier Road, Tucson, AZ 85746 GPS 32.107500, -111.007500 Map Google Maps Web sanxaviermission.org

Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes

A replica of the Lourdes grotto stands on the mission grounds, a popular devotional space.

Mission Hill and Cemetery

The hill behind the mission offers views across the desert and houses a small mortuary chapel and cemetery where members of the Tohono O'odham community are buried.

Shrine of Mary, Undoer of Knots

A newer Byzantine-style shrine in Tucson dedicated to the Marian devotion that deeply influenced Pope Francis. Beautiful icons and intimate atmosphere.

Address 502 E Corabel Lane, Tucson, AZ 85704 GPS 32.276667, -110.957500 Map Google Maps Web undoerofknots.net

🕯️ Annual Feast Days & Celebrations

Feast of St. Francis Xavier — December 3

The mission's patronal feast, celebrated with Mass and procession.

Easter at San Xavier

Traditional celebrations drawing pilgrims from across the Southwest.

Tohono O'odham Cultural Celebrations

Throughout the year, the mission hosts events celebrating the indigenous community's heritage.

🛏️ Where to Stay

Arizona Inn ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Historic 1930s resort in central Tucson. WebsiteReserve this hotel

Loews Ventana Canyon ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Desert resort in the Catalina Foothills. WebsiteReserve this hotel

Casino del Sol Resort ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Resort operated by the Pascua Yaqui Tribe, 10 minutes from the mission. Reserve this hotel

🚗 Getting There

By Air: Tucson International Airport (TUS) is 15 miles from the mission.

By Car: The mission is located 10 miles south of downtown Tucson on the San Xavier District of the Tohono O'odham Nation. Take I-19 south to Exit 92.

📚 Further Reading

Books:

Herbert E. Bolton, Rim of Christendom: A Biography of Eusebio Francisco Kino — Classic biography of the founder.

James S. Griffith, Beliefs and Holy Places: A Spiritual Geography of the Pimería Alta — Regional spiritual context.

Mission San Xavier del Bac — Mass schedule, tours, history.

Diocese of Tucson — Diocesan information.

🧭 Nearby Pilgrimage Destinations

Tumacácori National Historical Park (75 km south) — Ruins of other Kino missions.

San Diego (650 km west) — California's first mission.

🪶 Closing Reflection

"We must on no account give up what we have begun."Father Eusebio Kino, S.J.

🧭 Nearby Pilgrimage Destinations

Jump to Section